Archive December 12, 2025

Palmer’s groin problem makes no ‘sense’ – Maresca

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Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca says Cole Palmer’s ongoing groin injury makes no “sense” – and hopes it does not prove to be a season-long problem.

The 23-year-old is expected to start in Saturday’s Premier League match against Everton, having been rested for the midweek Champions League defeat by Atalanta.

Palmer has largely recovered from a freak toe injury sustained at home in November, but Maresca said the forward had “mixed feelings” after training this week.

“It’s the groin,” said the Blues boss. “Hopefully not something to manage all season, but it’s day by day. Some days he’s better, some days worse.

“For instance, after Leeds he was completely bad the day after and played half an hour. After Bournemouth he was OK and played an hour. There’s not any sense to it – it’s how he feels day by day.”

Maresca added “no-one mentioned” surgery was needed when he was pressed on the extent of the issue.

Chelsea have several players lacking the match fitness needed to play every three days, including Wesley Fofana and Romeo Lavia.

Palmer’s injury concerns come in a World Cup season, with fierce competition for a place in England’s squad, let alone for the number 10 role.

During the last international camp, Three Lions boss Thomas Tuchel said he will only call up two players for that position.

Jude Bellingham and Morgan Rogers started in the World Cup qualifying wins over Serbia and Albania, while Phil Foden came off the bench in both games and Eberechi Eze played out wide.

Chelsea captain Reece James, usually a right-back and previously used there by Tuchel for England, also played 90 minutes in midfield at Bournemouth and Atalanta this week.

Asked if James will start a third straight match, Maresca said: “Could be, yes.”

On whether it was out of necessity, he added: “We need Reece – not only in this game, but in all games.”

The switch is due to Moises Caicedo serving a three-match ban, which ends after Saturday’s game, and Lavia being injured.

Maresca continued to defend Chelsea’s rotation policy, which has come under scrutiny during a four-game winless run after making more than 100 starting XI changes this season.

“If you look at our first XI in games like Arsenal, Barcelona, Atalanta, Tottenham and Wolves at home, it’s the same eight or nine players – [Marc] Cucurella, Enzo Fernandez, Wes Fofana, Trev Chalobah, Pedro Neto, Joao Pedro, Malo Gusto, Reece James. They always play.

“If you go from Bournemouth to Atalanta, you mention five changes, but the same eight or nine players are always there.

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Palmer’s groin problem makes no ‘sense’ – Maresca

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Chelsea manager Enzo Maresca says Cole Palmer’s ongoing groin injury makes no “sense” – and hopes it does not prove to be a season-long problem.

The 23-year-old is expected to start in Saturday’s Premier League match against Everton, having been rested for the midweek Champions League defeat by Atalanta.

Palmer has largely recovered from a freak toe injury sustained at home in November, but Maresca said the forward had “mixed feelings” after training this week.

“It’s the groin,” said the Blues boss. “Hopefully not something to manage all season, but it’s day by day. Some days he’s better, some days worse.

“For instance, after Leeds he was completely bad the day after and played half an hour. After Bournemouth he was OK and played an hour. There’s not any sense to it – it’s how he feels day by day.”

Maresca added “no-one mentioned” surgery was needed when he was pressed on the extent of the issue.

Chelsea have several players lacking the match fitness needed to play every three days, including Wesley Fofana and Romeo Lavia.

Palmer’s injury concerns come in a World Cup season, with fierce competition for a place in England’s squad, let alone for the number 10 role.

During the last international camp, Three Lions boss Thomas Tuchel said he will only call up two players for that position.

Jude Bellingham and Morgan Rogers started in the World Cup qualifying wins over Serbia and Albania, while Phil Foden came off the bench in both games and Eberechi Eze played out wide.

Chelsea captain Reece James, usually a right-back and previously used there by Tuchel for England, also played 90 minutes in midfield at Bournemouth and Atalanta this week.

Asked if James will start a third straight match, Maresca said: “Could be, yes.”

On whether it was out of necessity, he added: “We need Reece – not only in this game, but in all games.”

The switch is due to Moises Caicedo serving a three-match ban, which ends after Saturday’s game, and Lavia being injured.

Maresca continued to defend Chelsea’s rotation policy, which has come under scrutiny during a four-game winless run after making more than 100 starting XI changes this season.

“If you look at our first XI in games like Arsenal, Barcelona, Atalanta, Tottenham and Wolves at home, it’s the same eight or nine players – [Marc] Cucurella, Enzo Fernandez, Wes Fofana, Trev Chalobah, Pedro Neto, Joao Pedro, Malo Gusto, Reece James. They always play.

“If you go from Bournemouth to Atalanta, you mention five changes, but the same eight or nine players are always there.

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Adam Peaty’s fresh blow as mum makes huge demand amid family feud

Adam Peaty’s mum is said to have written to Netflix and instructed bosses to remove her family from any scenes in Gordon Ramsay’s upcoming series, amidst the family fall out

Adam Peaty has been dealt another blow by his mother. In recent weeks, the Team GB Olympian has been at the centre of drama surrounding his family.

The former Strictly Come Dancing star had uninvited his relatives from his upcoming wedding to Holly Ramsay, which will take place this month. His whole family had been invited to the ceremony, with his brother also serving as a groomsman, but this changed when James allegedly sent “threats” to the swimmer and was subsequently arrested.

But it has since come to light that Adam’s sister, Bethany, will be his only relative in attendance. His mother, Caroline, was also not invited to Holly’s hen do at Soho Farmhouse, while Bethany was seen at the glitzy event alongside Lady Victoria Beckham.

And while there seems to be no signs of the family putting their differences aside, Caroline Peaty has now reportedly written to Netflix bosses. Sources claim that she has instructed them to remove herself and her family from any scenes they may appear in during Gordon Ramsay’s upcoming docu-series, Being Gordon Ramsay, which is slated for release next year.

Sources claim that Caroline gave bosses a strict 14-day deadline to respond to her request. Speaking to The Sun, a source said: “Caroline has written to Netflix to say the family were not asked for their consent to be filmed for Gordon’s documentary at last year’s engagement do.

“She was very clear that, after everything that’s happened, they do not want to be feature, she was filmed giving a speech as were the family during arrivals and while mingling at the party. They’re expecting a response from Netflix within 14 days of the letter’s arrival.”

However, a source has disputed this, telling the Mirror that at the engagement party, there were clear signs displayed throughout the evening. They added that everybody in attendance had a “jolly time” and that by attending, “you were giving your consent” to appear in his docu-series.

The source went on to add that the Peaty family were not formally interviewed, so there was no additional consent required, and they are not in the final edits of the programme. The source went on to tell us that there are “no delays to the production”.

Earlier this week, Adam made a dig at his mother on social media as he offered an insight into his stag do, which took place in Budapest. He captioned the series of snaps: “A few good weeks to backend the year [salute emoji].” One photo featured him donning a T-shirt adorned with fiancée Holly’s face and the words “wife 2 be”.

Adam was seen strolling alongside his friend, Ed Baxter, in the airport as they made their way to Budapest. Another image showed him casually sitting on the bonnet of an Aston Martin, possibly belonging to his soon-to-be father-in-law, celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay.

A third snap captured Holly, 25, beaming during a cosy festive date night at a bustling restaurant, while another saw Adam decorating a Christmas tree with his five-year-old son George perched on his shoulders.

Fans thought the shout-outs to Holly could be seen as a dig at his mum after taking his wife’s side following the upset over her hen do. Caroline has also taken to social media to say she had been hurt by people who love her, after she was left caring for Adam’s son during Holly’s hen do.

Adam recently broke his silence to share a statement about the feud. In a statement, he said: “For those who know me personally, you know that I work so hard on trying to improve myself as a person who wants to contribute to making the world a better place.

“I am continuing to learn about myself and how I can be the man I want to be; a worthy partner, father, businessman, friend and athlete; even through these challenging times. Bethany, Holly and I will get through this – we do not ask for sympathy. We just need people to be aware that there are always two sides to every story. To those of you who have reached out and shown kindness and understanding – thank you. It is deeply appreciated.”

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The Mirror has approached Netflix and Gordon Ramsay’s spokesperson for comment.

VIDEO: Why Mobile Phone Users Experienced Drop Calls In Abuja — Communications Minister

The Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Bosun Tijani, has explained the cause of the recent drop in calls in Abuja.

Tijani spoke on Friday during an interview on Channels Television’s Politics Today.

He addressed complaints about poor networks and widespread call disruptions across the city.

The minister said a dispute between a major tower management company and its diesel supplier triggered the problem.

READ ALSO: Telecoms Tariff Hike Shouldn’t Be More Than 60% — Minister

Tijani explained that the dispute escalated into a court matter involving both parties.

He said the supplier’s union later shut down several towers in Abuja during the disagreement.

“That’s what has been responsible for the drop in calls you’ve been seeing in Abuja,” the minister added.

Watch the video below:

Leinster score Champions Cup win as Leicester ‘run out of steam’

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Investec Champions Cup Pool Three

Leicester Tigers (15) 15

Tries: Radwan, Hassell-Collins Con: Searle Pen: Searle

Leinster (6) 23

Leinster fought back from nine points behind at half-time to beat a determined Leicester Tigers side 23-15 in the Champions Cup pool stage.

An outstanding defensive effort and two wonderful finishes by wing duo Adam Radwan and Ollie Hassell-Collins put Tigers into a 15-6 lead.

The visitors, forced into a pre-match change because prop Tadhg Furlong was ruled out with illness, also lost flanker Jack Conan and full-back Jimmy O’Brien to injuries in the first 15 minutes.

But a star-studded Leinster team, which contained several Ireland internationals and had New Zealand centre Rieko Ioane making his first start, eventually overcame those setbacks and their first-half deficit.

They scored 17 points without reply in the second half as tries from Lions pair Jamison Gibson-Park and Dan Sheehan meant Leinster have two wins from two outings in the pool stage.

    • 15 hours ago
    • 2 days ago

Four-time winners Leinster are perennial Champions Cup contenders, reaching at least the semi-final stage in eight of the past nine seasons.

Expected to be challengers again in 2025-26, they were made to work hard for their second victory over English opposition in the space of a week but were deserved winners.

Their two injuries came during an eventful opening 20 minutes at Mattioli Woods Welford Road.

Conan was hurt in a collision with Leicester’s Freddie Steward as he attempted to gather a crossfield kick and later failed a head injury assessment, while O’Brien limped off with a knock.

That frenetic passage of play also included a disallowed try for Leinster’s Tommy O’Brien, and a sizeable melee emanating from James Lowe taking exception to being tackled in the air by Radwan, whose sensational length-of-the-field try followed soon afterwards.

Leicester captain Tommy Reffell dislodged the ball in a tackle as Leinster attacked and it bounced loose inside the Tigers 22 to Radwan, who kicked ahead on several occasions and outpaced the chasing defenders before gleefully touching down in the corner.

Just before half-time, Lowe was unable to gather cleanly when Hassell-Collins controlled Billy Searle’s crossfield kick with his foot and the Leicester man took advantage to score.

Leinster, frustrated in attack in the opening 40 minutes, began to capitalise on their sustained pressure and got the key breakthrough shortly after the interval.

The ball squeezed free from a scrum near Leicester’s 22 and Gibson-Park was first to react, evading a couple of tackles before diving over.

Leinster ‘find a way’ to win but Parling ‘proud’ – reaction

Leicester full-back Freddie Steward told BBC Radio 5 Live:

“[The emotion is] disappointment. I think we had enough to win today.

“We talked in the week about belief, being aggressive and taking the game to them and I think we did that in the first half. We executed our game plan brilliantly and had the lead at half-time with two moments of magic.

“I don’t know what it was, we just ran out of steam and our discipline let us down.

“We said at the end in the huddle that if we don’t believe now that we’re good enough, then I don’t know what we need, because that’s one of the best teams in club rugby in the world and we’ve gone toe-to-toe with them.

“We can be proud of our fight and our effort, but that’s not good enough – we want to go beyond that now. We’ve got the fight and the effort, now we need to go and win games, but it’s definitely there, which is good.”

Tigers head coach Geoff Parling told Premier Sports:

“I’m proud of the way the group stood up for each other.

“I didn’t think things went for us in the game. We’ve just got to learn that when we feel we’re not getting the calls we deserve, what can we do to really tighten up and be more accurate in what we do?

“We had 37% territory in that game, so we played a lot in our half. I thought we defended so well for each other, but you saw at the top level of the game that one little moment where a ball kicks out of a scrum, that’s the difference between winning and losing.

“The young lads I’ve got here continue to surprise me with the way they work for each other and step up. As long as we learn from what we doing, we’re certainly not dead in the competition. There are two games to come and we know how this competition works.”

Leinster head coach Leo Cullen told Premier Sports:

“I thought we started the game really well with great intent. We had a lot of opportunities but we didn’t quite take them.

“You have to give the lads a huge amount of credit, it was an unbelievably composed dressing room at half-time.

“It’s difficult to play here. Leicester are incredibly dogged in everything they do.

What’s next?

Both sides will play their final two pool matches in January. Leicester face Bayonne at home and Stormers away, while Leinster host La Rochelle before visiting Bayonne.

Line-ups

Leicester: Steward; Radwan, Wand, Kata, Hassell-Collins; Searle, Whiteley; Smith, Blamire, Heyes, Henderson, Wells, Thompson, Reffell (capt), Moro.

Replacements: Theobald-Thomas, Van der Flier, Hurd, Manz, Williams, Allan, Bailey, Woodward.

Leinster: J O’Brien; T O’Brien, Ioane, Henshaw, Lowe; Byrne, Gibson-Park; McCarthy, Kelleher, Clarkson, McCarthy, Ryan, Conan, Van der Flier, Doris.

Match officials

Referee: Pierre Brousset (France)

Assistant referees: Vincent Blasco Baque (France) and Julien Caulier (France)

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Leinster rally to beat Leicester in Champions Cup

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  • 167 Comments

Investec Champions Cup Pool Three

Leicester Tigers (15) 15

Tries: Radwan, Hassell-Collins Con: Searle Pen: Searle

Leinster (6) 23

Leinster fought back from nine points behind at half-time to beat a determined Leicester Tigers side 23-15 in the Champions Cup pool stage.

An outstanding defensive effort and two wonderful finishes by wing duo Adam Radwan and Ollie Hassell-Collins put Tigers into a 15-6 lead.

The visitors, forced into a pre-match change because prop Tadhg Furlong was ruled out with illness, also lost flanker Jack Conan and full-back Jimmy O’Brien to injuries in the first 15 minutes.

But a star-studded Leinster team, which contained several Ireland internationals and had New Zealand centre Rieko Ioane making his first start, eventually overcame those setbacks and their first-half deficit.

They scored 17 points without reply in the second half as tries from Lions pair Jamison Gibson-Park and Dan Sheehan meant Leinster have two wins from two outings in the pool stage.

    • 5 hours ago
    • 2 days ago

Four-time winners Leinster are perennial Champions Cup contenders, reaching at least the semi-final stage in eight of the past nine seasons.

Expected to be challengers again in 2025-26, they were made to work hard for their second victory over English opposition in the space of a week but were deserved winners.

Their two injuries came during an eventful opening 20 minutes at Mattioli Woods Welford Road.

Conan was hurt in a collision with Leicester’s Freddie Steward as he attempted to gather a crossfield kick and later failed a head injury assessment, while O’Brien limped off with a knock.

That frenetic passage of play also included a disallowed try for Leinster’s Tommy O’Brien, and a sizeable melee emanating from James Lowe taking exception to being tackled in the air by Radwan, whose sensational length-of-the-field try followed soon afterwards.

Leicester captain Tommy Reffell dislodged the ball in a tackle as Leinster attacked and it bounced loose inside the Tigers 22 to Radwan, who kicked ahead on several occasions and outpaced the chasing defenders before gleefully touching down in the corner.

Just before half-time, Lowe was unable to gather cleanly when Hassell-Collins controlled Billy Searle’s crossfield kick with his foot and the Leicester man took advantage to score.

Leinster, frustrated in attack in the opening 40 minutes, began to capitalise on their sustained pressure and got the key breakthrough shortly after the interval.

The ball squeezed free from a scrum near Leicester’s 22 and Gibson-Park was first to react, evading a couple of tackles before diving over.

Leinster ‘find a way’ to win but Parling ‘proud’ – reaction

Leicester full-back Freddie Steward told BBC Radio 5 Live:

“[The emotion is] disappointment. I think we had enough to win today.

“We talked in the week about belief, being aggressive and taking the game to them and I think we did that in the first half. We executed our game plan brilliantly and had the lead at half-time with two moments of magic.

“I don’t know what it was, we just ran out of steam and our discipline let us down.

“We said at the end in the huddle that if we don’t believe now that we’re good enough, then I don’t know what we need, because that’s one of the best teams in club rugby in the world and we’ve gone toe-to-toe with them.

“We can be proud of our fight and our effort, but that’s not good enough – we want to go beyond that now. We’ve got the fight and the effort, now we need to go and win games, but it’s definitely there, which is good.”

Tigers head coach Geoff Parling told Premier Sports:

“I’m proud of the way the group stood up for each other.

“I didn’t think things went for us in the game. We’ve just got to learn that when we feel we’re not getting the calls we deserve, what can we do to really tighten up and be more accurate in what we do?

“We had 37% territory in that game, so we played a lot in our half. I thought we defended so well for each other, but you saw at the top level of the game that one little moment where a ball kicks out of a scrum, that’s the difference between winning and losing.

“The young lads I’ve got here continue to surprise me with the way they work for each other and step up. As long as we learn from what we doing, we’re certainly not dead in the competition. There are two games to come and we know how this competition works.”

Leinster head coach Leo Cullen told Premier Sports:

“I thought we started the game really well with great intent. We had a lot of opportunities but we didn’t quite take them.

“You have to give the lads a huge amount of credit, it was an unbelievably composed dressing room at half-time.

“It’s difficult to play here. Leicester are incredibly dogged in everything they do.

What’s next?

Both sides will play their final two pool matches in January. Leicester face Bayonne at home and Stormers away, while Leinster host La Rochelle before visiting Bayonne.

Line-ups

Leicester: Steward; Radwan, Wand, Kata, Hassell-Collins; Searle, Whiteley; Smith, Blamire, Heyes, Henderson, Wells, Thompson, Reffell (capt), Moro.

Replacements: Theobald-Thomas, Van der Flier, Hurd, Manz, Williams, Allan, Bailey, Woodward.

Leinster: J O’Brien; T O’Brien, Ioane, Henshaw, Lowe; Byrne, Gibson-Park; McCarthy, Kelleher, Clarkson, McCarthy, Ryan, Conan, Van der Flier, Doris.

Match officials

Referee: Pierre Brousset (France)

Assistant referees: Vincent Blasco Baque (France) and Julien Caulier (France)

Related topics

  • Leinster
  • Irish Rugby
  • Rugby Union
  • English Rugby
  • Leicester Tigers